Young bear captured in West Island euthanized, Wildlife Ministry confirms - Action News
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Young bear captured in West Island euthanized, Wildlife Ministry confirms

A bear that was caught in Dorval on Sunday was euthanized on Monday, according to the Quebec Ministry of Forests, Wildlife andParks. Members of the animal rescue group that helped co-ordinate the operation say they weren't consulted and could have found a refuge for it to live out the rest of its days.

Animal rescue group says it could have found a refuge for the bear

The bear was hit with tranquilizer darts and captured on Sunday. By Monday, the animal group that helped carry out the operation had learned that the bear had been put down. (Kolya Hubacek-Guilbault/Radio-Canada)

A bear which caused a stir on Sunday after it was seen running loose in Dorvalhas been euthanized, according to the Quebec Ministry of Forests, Wildlife andParks.

The animal control group which was on the scene to help orchestrate the bear's safe capture before it was taken away by wildlife agents expressed shock that the animal had beenput down.

In a Facebook post made Monday evening,Sauvetage Animal Rescue said it onlylearned the bear had been put down through media reports.

"At the end of the operation [Sunday], we were informed that the bear would be set free away from the city," reads the post.

"We weren't contacted by the Ministry of Forests, Wildlife andParks to say that another decision had been made. For our part, we are in contact with several refuges that could have taken the young bear if release was not possible."

According to the ministry, the bear was deemed to be unafraidof humans and thus, posed a public safety risk if returned to the wild.

The bear was about 18 months old, making it asubadult and not a cub,the ministry saidin a statement Tuesday.

The problems of co-habitation with bearsare not always linked to a high density of the species, but rather to the animal becoming accustomedto human activities, the statement said.

According to the ministry, this is the first time that provincial wildlifeagents have responded to a bear report on the island of Montreal.

Animal rescue groups wanted to release bear in wild

Steven Amorosa, who works with Sauvetage Animal Rescue, said the last he heard, the plan was to release the bear in a remote part of the Laurentians.

"We were hoping that the bear was going to be relocated somewhere away from the city so that kind of thing wouldn't happen again," he said.

Sauvetage Animal Rescue expressed shock that the decision was made without trying to find an alternative solution. (Kolya Hubacek-Guilbault/Radio-Canada)

Amorosa doubted that the bear would have posed a significant danger so far away, especially considering he was only about a year-and-a-halfold.

"In the Laurentians, in the woods,Idoubt there's a lot of people around."

Amorosasaid he was "very disappointed" that no efforts were made to contact his group or to brainstormsolutions.

"We had people that were willing to take the bear in," saidAmorosa. "We do have resources around that could have taken care of him instead of having to put the bear down."

Quebec Ministry of Forests, Wildlife and Parks says the option of placing the bear refuge or zoo was ruled out for several reasons.

One being that keeping an animal like a bear in a refuge can be dangerous to humans, it saidin the statement, and "life in captivity is not an optimal solution for these animals and could seriously affect their well-being."

WATCH| Animal rescue worker says captured bear did not need to be euthanized

Animal rescue worker shocked to learn captured bear was euthanized

3 years ago
Duration 4:36
Steven Amorosa, with Sauvetage Animal Rescue, says he was shocked to learn that the province's wildlife officials had put down the bear who was captured.